How the world learned to love fast food ⏲️ 6 Minute English

9,289 views ・ 2025-01-23

BBC Learning English


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00:08
Hello, this is Six Minute English from BBC Learning English.
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I'm Phil, and I'm Beth.
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Love it or hate it, there's no doubt fast food is popular.
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Are you a fast food fan, Beth?
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Um. Not really, no.
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I think sometimes it can be quite convenient, obviously,
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because it's quick, but not really.
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Well, whatever you think about them, fast food brands like KFC, Domino's
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and of course the big one, McDonald's, are incredibly successful.
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In this programme, we'll be discussing the global spread of fast food
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from its beginnings in 1950s America.
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As usual, we'll be learning some useful new words and phrases.
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But first, I have a question for you, Beth.
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Roughly how many fast food restaurants are there in the UK?
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Is it a) 4,000, b) 42,000,
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or c) four million?
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I'm going to go for b) 42,000.
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OK, well, later on, we'll find out the answer.
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In the United States, cheap and easy food like hamburgers, french fries,
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and milkshakes have been popular since the 1950s.
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Listen as Adam Chandler, author of the book Drive Thru Dreams,
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which traces the history of American fast food,
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tells BBC World Service programme, The Food Chain how it all got started.
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At the heart of the story of fast food is a very
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'anyone can do this' sense.
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A lot of the company founders didn't have a college degree,
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who didn't have a high school degree in a lot of instances,
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didn't come from money, were oftentimes just people who were ready
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to plug themselves into a system that would work for them.
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And it did.
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It made opportunity very, very easy
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in a time when that was a new part of the of the American experience.
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So it was the American dream in a very small way,
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that became the American dream in a very big way.
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The rise of fast food reflected the rise of American economic power
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after the Second World War.
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When Adam says that this lies at the heart of the story,
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he means it's the most important part of the story.
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In the 1950s, when the famous brands we know today were just beginning,
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anyone with a can-do attitude could sell fast food.
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A can-do attitude describes someone who is confident
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and determined to fix problems and achieve results.
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Which is exactly what happened at successful restaurants
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like Kentucky Fried Chicken and McDonald's.
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For many, these fast food brands symbolised the American dream -
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the idea that anyone in the United States can achieve success
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through hard work and determination.
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The success of KFC, McDonald's and the rest wasn't limited to America.
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Nowadays, you can visit two McDonald's on opposite sides of the planet
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and eat exactly the same meal.
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But not every country opened its arms in welcome.
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The tiny island of Iceland, for one.
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Andie Sophia Fontaine, who used to work in McDonald's,
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now edits The Iceland Review.
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Here, she tells BBC World Service programme The Food Chain
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how McDonald's got a frosty reception when it started selling burgers
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in Iceland's capital, Reykjavik.
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There's been a long standing burger culture in Iceland.
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They have their own take on the hamburger,
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wherein they'll use lettuce and raw cucumbers
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and a type of fry sauce - that's called a shalpurborgari, or a shop burger,
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and that's been around for ages.
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Yeah, so McDonald's, they struggled to try to maintain a market.
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The final nail in the coffin was the global financial crisis
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in 2008/2009.
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Iceland already had a long-standing tradition of eating burgers -
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a tradition that had existed for a long time.
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For example, the shalpurborgari,
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or shop burger, was a take on - or variation of - the American hamburger.
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McDonald's weren't as successful in Iceland as they'd been elsewhere.
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And the global financial crash of 2008 was the final nail in the coffin,
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an event which caused the failure of something
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that had already started to go wrong.
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To this day, there are no McDonald's in Iceland, unlike Britain.
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Which reminds me of your question, Phil.
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Yes. I asked you how many fast food restaurants there are in Britain.
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I asked you if there were 4,000, 42,000 or four million.
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And of course, the answer is 42,000
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so you were right, well done!
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OK, let's recap the vocabulary we've learned,
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starting with 'at the heart of', meaning
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the most important part, or the cause of something.
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If you say that someone has a can-do attitude,
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you mean they are confident to take action, fix problems,
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and deal with new challenges.
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The American dream is the belief that everyone in the USA has
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the opportunity to be successful and happy if they work hard.
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The adjective 'long-standing' means having existed for a long time.
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'A take on' something means a variation or new way of presenting it.
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And finally, the idiom 'the final nail in the coffin' refers to an event
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that causes the final end of something that had already started to fail.
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Once again, our six minutes are up,
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but why not head over to the BBC Learning English website,
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where you'll find a worksheet and quiz especially for this programme.
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See you there soon. Goodbye.
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